The accomplished and unanimously respected DJ never got to finish his set, and immediately took to Twitter to make his stance clear: "I don't care if I get kicked out of every rich kid club on the planet. I will never sacrifice my integrity as a DJ...ever #AllBassesCovered."

That's where Proper Dosage's Gaurav Khanna, Rene Aguiar, and Eric Carbonell got the inspiration for their new monthly party, Too Future, which takes place every third Monday of the month at Original Fat Cat's in downtown Fort Lauderdale. Their goal is to bring underground roots, dubstep, and drum & bass sounds to Broward County.

Tonight, the group will introduce British minimal dubstep DJ,

producer, and radio host Youngsta to the area. Only a few months old, the party aims to cater to a crowd

seeking an alternative music experience.

"Most popular electronic

music, especially dubstep, has gone completely over-the-top in our

humble opinions," says Khanna. "It is poppy, loud, brash,

overly-compressed, and oft-recycled four minute chunks of cheese. We

don't like it like that. We like the soul and funk, the drums and bass."

The

choice to bring UK's Youngsta all the way down to Florida for a Monday

night dance party in the heart of a not exactly burgeoning Fort

Lauderdale underground electronic scene had to do with Proper Dosage's

dedication to quality music and steadily increasing the prestige of

their young party.

"When the agencies came calling, we had to

book him no matter what," Khanna says. Youngsta hosts a weekly radio

show on Rinse.FM, London's award-winning, 18-year-old underground

mainstay -- and the Proper Dosage crew listen religiously. Minimal

Monday highlights the best new sounds in the minimal dubstep movement,

focusing on sparser beats with more space and less chaos. "But [it] can

still be plenty heavy," insists Khanna.

The choice to have the

party at Fat Cat's was also deliberate. According to Khanna, the gritty

downtown spot is "the only long-standing venue downtown that has

alternative and underground forms of music on a regular schedule,

alongside great bands, a reggae night, et cetera. The bartenders are vested in

the music and have helped greatly... It is far easier for a bar to just

play top-40 and ram a bunch of people inside night after night."

Pioneering

the West Palm Beach underground scene back in 2008 with the first

dubstep night at Respectables, Proper Dosage have since set out to break

through the hype and show South Florida another side of electronic

music, the side that can be "haunting or beautiful or both," says

Khanna. According to him, "This is how all electronic music started, and

how a small minority of us prefer it. It is, by nature, underground. It

is a state of mind as much as a dance floor."

Over the years,

Proper Dosage have brought some of their favorite DJs to different clubs

all over the tri-county area, including Bassline Smith, Gemmy, J:Kenzo,